The Resurrection

      Pocket Handbook of
     Christian Apologetics
           Chapter 9
  Peter Kreeft & Ronald Tacelli
Every sermon preached by Christians
in the NT centres on the resurrection.
Kreeft says, “The Gospel or “good
news” means essentially the news of
Christ’s resurrection.” he goes on to
say that the news that set the ancient
world on fire was not that of ‘love
your neighbour’ but of the
resurrection of Jesus Christ, who
claimed to be the Son of God and
Saviour of the world.
The resurrection is of crucial
importance because it completes our
salvation - Rom 6:23
Abraham, Buddha,
Muhammed, Confucius and
Lao Tzu all still lie dead in their
graves - the tomb of Jesus is
empty.
In life changing terms we see
the difference in the disciples
before and after the
resurrection - before hidden
behind closed doors, after
confident world changing
missionaries and ready to face
martyrdom if necessary.
It is important to see that the
resurrection is not in the past,
“Christ rose”, - but in the
present, “Christ is risen”
He is living - Lk 24:5
Do you keep Christ mummified
in words like apologetics and
history - or do you allow him to
live and set lives alight now as
he did millennia ago?
For that is what the
resurrection did - and still does.
The strategy of the argument for
   the resurrection - 5 theories

The resurrection can be
proved and believed with as
much historical credibility as
any other well documented
event in ancient history. The
two basic assumptions for
such a belief are simple and
are based on empirical data
which is no disputed:
The strategy of the argument for
   the resurrection - 5 theories


The existence of the NT
texts as we have them,
and the existence (but not
necessarily the truth) of
the Christian religion as
we find it today.
The question to ask is this:
Which theory about what
happened in Jerusalem
on that first Easter
Sunday can account for
the data?
The following five
diagrams represent the
possible theories.
5 Theories about the resurrection

Jesus Died   Jesus Rose         1. Christianity
5 Theories about the resurrection

Jesus Died      Jesus Rose              1. Christianity

                        The apostles
                                        2. Hallucination
          Jesus         were deceived
        didn’t rise
5 Theories about the resurrection

Jesus Died      Jesus Rose                  1. Christianity

                        The apostles
                                            2. Hallucination
          Jesus         were deceived
        didn’t rise
                        The apostles were
                          myth-makers           3. Myth
5 Theories about the resurrection

Jesus Died      Jesus Rose                  1. Christianity

                        The apostles
                                            2. Hallucination
          Jesus         were deceived
        didn’t rise
                        The apostles were
                          myth-makers           3. Myth

                         The apostles
                                            4. Conspiracy
                        were deceivers
5 Theories about the resurrection

Jesus Died      Jesus Rose                  1. Christianity

                        The apostles
                                            2. Hallucination
          Jesus         were deceived
        didn’t rise
                        The apostles were
                          myth-makers           3. Myth

                         The apostles
                                            4. Conspiracy
                        were deceivers

  Jesus
                                               5. Swoon
didn’t die
Could it be that Christ in fact
survived the crucifixion, he did
not die but just swooned?
Here are 9 arguments in
response to the swoon theory:
1. Jesus could not have
survived crucifixion. Roman
procedures were very careful to
eliminate that possibility. Roman
law even laid the death penalty
on any soldier who let a capital
prisoner escape in any way,
including bungling a crucifixion.
It was never done.
2. The fact that the Roman
soldier did not break Jesus'
legs, as he did to the other two
crucified criminals (Jn
19:31-33), means that the
soldier was sure Jesus was
dead. Breaking the legs
hastened the death so that the
corpse could be taken down
before the sabbath.
3. John, an eyewitness,
certified that he saw blood
and water come from
Jesus' pierced heart (Jn
19:34-35). This shows that
Jesus' lungs had collapsed
and he had died of
asphyxiation. Any medical
expert can vouch for this.
4. The body was totally
encased in winding sheets
and entombed (Jn
19:38-42).
5. The post-resurrection
appearances convinced the
disciples, even doubting Thomas,
that Jesus was alive (Jn
20:19-29). It is psychologically
impossible for the disciples to have
been so transformed and confident
if Jesus had merely struggled out
of a swoon, badly in need of a
doctor. A half-dead, staggering
sick man who has just had a
narrow escape is not worshiped
fearlessly as divine lord and
conquerer of death.
6. How were the Roman guards at the
tomb overpowered by a swooning
corpse? Or by unarmed disciples? And
if the disciples did it, they knowingly
lied when they wrote the Gospels, and
we are into the conspiracy theory.
7. How could a swooning half-
dead man have moved the great
stone at the door of the tomb?
Who moved the stone if not an
angel? No one has ever
answered that question. Neither
the Jews nor the Romans would
move it, for it was in both their
interests to keep the tomb sealed,
the Jews had the stone put there
in the first place, and the Roman
guards would be killed if they let
the body "escape."
The story the Jewish
authorities spread, that the
guards fell asleep and the
disciples stole the body (Mt
28:11-15), is unbelievable.
Roman guards would not
fall asleep on a job like that;
if they did, they would lose
their lives. If they did fall
asleep, the crowd and the
effort and the noise it would
have taken to move an
enormous boulder would
have wakened them.
8. If Jesus awoke from a
swoon, where did he go?
Think this through: you have
a living body to deal with
now, not a dead one. Why did
it disappear? There is
absolutely no data, not even
any false, fantastic, imagined
data, about Jesus' life after
his crucifixion, in any
sources, friend or foe, at any
time, early or late. A man like
that, with a past like that,
would have left traces.
9. Most simply, the
swoon theory necessarily
turns into the conspiracy
theory or the
hallucination theory, for
the disciples testified that
Jesus did not swoon but
really died and really
rose.
Refutation of the Conspiracy
        Theory: Seven Arguments
Why couldn't the disciples
have made up the whole
story?
1. Blaise Pascal gives a simple,
psychologically sound proof
for why this is unthinkable:
"The apostles were either
deceived or deceivers. Either
supposition is difficult, for it is
not possible to imagine that a
man has risen from the dead...
Refutation of the Conspiracy
 Theory: Seven Arguments
The hypothesis that the Apostles were dishonest
is quite absurd. Follow it out to the end, and
imagine these twelve men meeting after Jesus'
death and conspiring to say that he has risen
from the dead. This means attacking all the
powers that be. The human heart is susceptible
to fickleness, to change, to promises, to bribery.
One of them had only to deny his story under
these inducements, or still more because of
possible imprisonment, tortures and death, and
they would all have been lost. Follow that out."
Pascal, Pensees 322, 310
The "cruncher" in this argument is the historical
fact that no one, weak or strong, saint or sinner,
Christian or heretic, ever confessed, freely or
under pressure, bribe or even torture, that the
whole story of the resurrection was a fake a lie,
a deliberate deception. Even when people broke
under torture, denied Christ and worshiped
Caesar, they never let that cat out of the bag,
never revealed that the resurrection was their
conspiracy. For that cat was never in that bag.
No Christians believed the resurrection was a
conspiracy; if they had, they wouldn't have
become Christians.
2. If they made up the
story, they were the most
creative, clever, intelligent
fantasists in history, far
surpassing Shakespeare,
or Dante or Tolkien.
Fisherman's "fish stories"
are never that elaborate,
that convincing, that life-
changing, and that
enduring.
3. The disciples' character
argues strongly against such a
conspiracy on the part of all of
them, with no dissenters. They
were simple, honest, common
peasants, not cunning,
conniving liars. Their sincerity
is proved by their words and
deeds. They preached a
resurrected Christ and they
lived a resurrected Christ.
They willingly died for their
"conspiracy." Nothing proves
sincerity like martyrdom.
They change in their lives
from fear to faith, despair to
confidence, confusion to
certitude, runaway cowardice
to steadfast boldness under
threat and persecution, not
only proves their sincerity but
testifies to some powerful
cause of it. Can a lie cause
such a transformation? Are
truth and goodness such
enemies that the greatest good
in history -- sanctity -- has
come from the greatest lie?
4. There could be no
possible motive for such a
lie. Lies are always told for
some selfish advantage. What
advantage did the
"conspirators" derive from
their "lie" ? They were hated,
scorned, persecuted,
excommunicated, imprisoned,
tortured, exiled, crucified,
boiled alive, roasted,
beheaded, disemboweled and
fed to lions - hardly a catalog
of perks!
5. If the resurrection was a lie, the
Jews would have produced the
corpse. All they had to do was go
to the tomb and get it. The
Roman soldiers and their leaders
were on their side. If the Jews
couldn't get the body because the
disciples stole it, how did they do
that? The arguments against the
swoon theory hold here too:
unarmed peasants could not have
overpowered Roman soldiers or
rolled away a great stone while
they slept on duty.
6. The disciples could not have
gotten away with proclaiming the
resurrection in Jerusalem - same
time, same place, full of
eyewitnesses - if it had been a lie.
William Lane Craig says,
"The fact that the disciples were able to
proclaim the resurrection in Jerusalem
in the face of their enemies a few weeks
after the crucifixion shows that what
they proclaimed was true, for they could
never have proclaimed the resurrection
(and been believed) under such
circumstances had it not occurred.”

Apologetics, Kreeft Chapter 9: The Resurrection of Jesus Christ (part1)

  • 1.
    The Resurrection Pocket Handbook of Christian Apologetics Chapter 9 Peter Kreeft & Ronald Tacelli
  • 2.
    Every sermon preachedby Christians in the NT centres on the resurrection. Kreeft says, “The Gospel or “good news” means essentially the news of Christ’s resurrection.” he goes on to say that the news that set the ancient world on fire was not that of ‘love your neighbour’ but of the resurrection of Jesus Christ, who claimed to be the Son of God and Saviour of the world. The resurrection is of crucial importance because it completes our salvation - Rom 6:23
  • 3.
    Abraham, Buddha, Muhammed, Confuciusand Lao Tzu all still lie dead in their graves - the tomb of Jesus is empty. In life changing terms we see the difference in the disciples before and after the resurrection - before hidden behind closed doors, after confident world changing missionaries and ready to face martyrdom if necessary.
  • 4.
    It is importantto see that the resurrection is not in the past, “Christ rose”, - but in the present, “Christ is risen” He is living - Lk 24:5 Do you keep Christ mummified in words like apologetics and history - or do you allow him to live and set lives alight now as he did millennia ago? For that is what the resurrection did - and still does.
  • 5.
    The strategy ofthe argument for the resurrection - 5 theories The resurrection can be proved and believed with as much historical credibility as any other well documented event in ancient history. The two basic assumptions for such a belief are simple and are based on empirical data which is no disputed:
  • 6.
    The strategy ofthe argument for the resurrection - 5 theories The existence of the NT texts as we have them, and the existence (but not necessarily the truth) of the Christian religion as we find it today.
  • 7.
    The question toask is this: Which theory about what happened in Jerusalem on that first Easter Sunday can account for the data? The following five diagrams represent the possible theories.
  • 8.
    5 Theories aboutthe resurrection Jesus Died Jesus Rose 1. Christianity
  • 9.
    5 Theories aboutthe resurrection Jesus Died Jesus Rose 1. Christianity The apostles 2. Hallucination Jesus were deceived didn’t rise
  • 10.
    5 Theories aboutthe resurrection Jesus Died Jesus Rose 1. Christianity The apostles 2. Hallucination Jesus were deceived didn’t rise The apostles were myth-makers 3. Myth
  • 11.
    5 Theories aboutthe resurrection Jesus Died Jesus Rose 1. Christianity The apostles 2. Hallucination Jesus were deceived didn’t rise The apostles were myth-makers 3. Myth The apostles 4. Conspiracy were deceivers
  • 12.
    5 Theories aboutthe resurrection Jesus Died Jesus Rose 1. Christianity The apostles 2. Hallucination Jesus were deceived didn’t rise The apostles were myth-makers 3. Myth The apostles 4. Conspiracy were deceivers Jesus 5. Swoon didn’t die
  • 13.
    Could it bethat Christ in fact survived the crucifixion, he did not die but just swooned? Here are 9 arguments in response to the swoon theory: 1. Jesus could not have survived crucifixion. Roman procedures were very careful to eliminate that possibility. Roman law even laid the death penalty on any soldier who let a capital prisoner escape in any way, including bungling a crucifixion. It was never done.
  • 14.
    2. The factthat the Roman soldier did not break Jesus' legs, as he did to the other two crucified criminals (Jn 19:31-33), means that the soldier was sure Jesus was dead. Breaking the legs hastened the death so that the corpse could be taken down before the sabbath.
  • 15.
    3. John, aneyewitness, certified that he saw blood and water come from Jesus' pierced heart (Jn 19:34-35). This shows that Jesus' lungs had collapsed and he had died of asphyxiation. Any medical expert can vouch for this. 4. The body was totally encased in winding sheets and entombed (Jn 19:38-42).
  • 16.
    5. The post-resurrection appearancesconvinced the disciples, even doubting Thomas, that Jesus was alive (Jn 20:19-29). It is psychologically impossible for the disciples to have been so transformed and confident if Jesus had merely struggled out of a swoon, badly in need of a doctor. A half-dead, staggering sick man who has just had a narrow escape is not worshiped fearlessly as divine lord and conquerer of death.
  • 17.
    6. How werethe Roman guards at the tomb overpowered by a swooning corpse? Or by unarmed disciples? And if the disciples did it, they knowingly lied when they wrote the Gospels, and we are into the conspiracy theory.
  • 18.
    7. How coulda swooning half- dead man have moved the great stone at the door of the tomb? Who moved the stone if not an angel? No one has ever answered that question. Neither the Jews nor the Romans would move it, for it was in both their interests to keep the tomb sealed, the Jews had the stone put there in the first place, and the Roman guards would be killed if they let the body "escape."
  • 19.
    The story theJewish authorities spread, that the guards fell asleep and the disciples stole the body (Mt 28:11-15), is unbelievable. Roman guards would not fall asleep on a job like that; if they did, they would lose their lives. If they did fall asleep, the crowd and the effort and the noise it would have taken to move an enormous boulder would have wakened them.
  • 20.
    8. If Jesusawoke from a swoon, where did he go? Think this through: you have a living body to deal with now, not a dead one. Why did it disappear? There is absolutely no data, not even any false, fantastic, imagined data, about Jesus' life after his crucifixion, in any sources, friend or foe, at any time, early or late. A man like that, with a past like that, would have left traces.
  • 21.
    9. Most simply,the swoon theory necessarily turns into the conspiracy theory or the hallucination theory, for the disciples testified that Jesus did not swoon but really died and really rose.
  • 22.
    Refutation of theConspiracy Theory: Seven Arguments Why couldn't the disciples have made up the whole story? 1. Blaise Pascal gives a simple, psychologically sound proof for why this is unthinkable: "The apostles were either deceived or deceivers. Either supposition is difficult, for it is not possible to imagine that a man has risen from the dead...
  • 23.
    Refutation of theConspiracy Theory: Seven Arguments
  • 24.
    The hypothesis thatthe Apostles were dishonest is quite absurd. Follow it out to the end, and imagine these twelve men meeting after Jesus' death and conspiring to say that he has risen from the dead. This means attacking all the powers that be. The human heart is susceptible to fickleness, to change, to promises, to bribery. One of them had only to deny his story under these inducements, or still more because of possible imprisonment, tortures and death, and they would all have been lost. Follow that out." Pascal, Pensees 322, 310
  • 25.
    The "cruncher" inthis argument is the historical fact that no one, weak or strong, saint or sinner, Christian or heretic, ever confessed, freely or under pressure, bribe or even torture, that the whole story of the resurrection was a fake a lie, a deliberate deception. Even when people broke under torture, denied Christ and worshiped Caesar, they never let that cat out of the bag, never revealed that the resurrection was their conspiracy. For that cat was never in that bag. No Christians believed the resurrection was a conspiracy; if they had, they wouldn't have become Christians.
  • 26.
    2. If theymade up the story, they were the most creative, clever, intelligent fantasists in history, far surpassing Shakespeare, or Dante or Tolkien. Fisherman's "fish stories" are never that elaborate, that convincing, that life- changing, and that enduring.
  • 27.
    3. The disciples'character argues strongly against such a conspiracy on the part of all of them, with no dissenters. They were simple, honest, common peasants, not cunning, conniving liars. Their sincerity is proved by their words and deeds. They preached a resurrected Christ and they lived a resurrected Christ. They willingly died for their "conspiracy." Nothing proves sincerity like martyrdom.
  • 28.
    They change intheir lives from fear to faith, despair to confidence, confusion to certitude, runaway cowardice to steadfast boldness under threat and persecution, not only proves their sincerity but testifies to some powerful cause of it. Can a lie cause such a transformation? Are truth and goodness such enemies that the greatest good in history -- sanctity -- has come from the greatest lie?
  • 29.
    4. There couldbe no possible motive for such a lie. Lies are always told for some selfish advantage. What advantage did the "conspirators" derive from their "lie" ? They were hated, scorned, persecuted, excommunicated, imprisoned, tortured, exiled, crucified, boiled alive, roasted, beheaded, disemboweled and fed to lions - hardly a catalog of perks!
  • 30.
    5. If theresurrection was a lie, the Jews would have produced the corpse. All they had to do was go to the tomb and get it. The Roman soldiers and their leaders were on their side. If the Jews couldn't get the body because the disciples stole it, how did they do that? The arguments against the swoon theory hold here too: unarmed peasants could not have overpowered Roman soldiers or rolled away a great stone while they slept on duty.
  • 31.
    6. The disciplescould not have gotten away with proclaiming the resurrection in Jerusalem - same time, same place, full of eyewitnesses - if it had been a lie. William Lane Craig says, "The fact that the disciples were able to proclaim the resurrection in Jerusalem in the face of their enemies a few weeks after the crucifixion shows that what they proclaimed was true, for they could never have proclaimed the resurrection (and been believed) under such circumstances had it not occurred.”